CHAPTER XLII
THE SURREY SIDE
Mortlake.--The Boat Race.--A duel.--Putney-by-the-sea.--Punch and Judy.--Kennington.--Gallows and faggots.--The proper way to subscribe to a Cricket Club.--Camberwell Beauties.--The Tradescants and their Dodo.--Mr. Jeffery Saffery.--The old Surrey Side.--The Tabard.--The Old Road.
The Surrey side begins, perhaps, if it begins anywhere definitely, at Mortlake, where the Boat-race ends. By Kew and Richmond the Thames runs for pleasure-boats, gigs and skiffs with shining oars. Below Mortlake the river hears the forge and the dockyard; torpedo-boats drive out into the tide; it is different water, London water, under their bows. The four miles of the Thames of the Boat-race mark the gradual change. On a rough day the two eights ride through waves which are less like a river than a sea; and perhaps the rough water has made some of the best history of the race. When Cambridge sank in 1859 she was waterlogged early in the race; she could not have won, but the steamers following the eights prevented her even from passing the winning-post, by swamping her with their wash. Oxford won, but Cambridge's was an equal honour. The crew rowed on as the boat went under the water; and the name that will always belong to that race is that of a future Lord Justice, Mr. A.L. Smith. Cambridge and Mr. A.L. Smith went on rowing in the water, knowing that Mr. Smith could not swim. On another rough day, thirty-nine years later, the race was lost and won by the toss; the Cambridge boat filled at the start, and Oxford rowed in out of the wind. Other historic races belong to the curve of the river above Barnes Bridge; three in
## particular, in 1886, 1896, and 1901, when the crew that was behind at
Barnes Bridge passed the other crew at the bend of the river and won. Of other historic races, perhaps the wins of the two crews in which a Goldie turned the fortunes of his University will always possess peculiar glories. The first Goldie, in 1870, ended a series of nine Oxford wins. Another Goldie, in 1899, helped Cambridge to end another series, also of nine. The name and the two nines in the date surely made the feat inevitable.
The river water does not change, but the banks have altered from grass and reeds to concrete and stone. It was a mile or so from Barnes Bridge, in a field near Barn Elms (but who could guess where?) that the second Duke of Buckingham fought and shot Lord Shrewsbury. The Duke left behind him one of the wickedest lives of the most dissolute Courts of English history; but he left nothing viler than the name of Lord Shrewsbury's Countess, who rode in boy's clothes as a page to the duelling ground, and then held her seducer's horse while he shot her husband. They left him dying and rode back together. That was in 1667; an earlier and a kindlier association of Barn Elms is a resident who afterwards died at Chertsey, Abraham Cowley; later came Jacob Tonson, bibliophile and publisher of Pope and Dryden. And it was at Barn Elms, too, that the Kit-Kat Club, the thirty who dined at Christopher Kat's in the Strand, and bound themselves to uphold the Protestant succession, met and dined and looked at their portraits painted by Sir Godfrey Kneller. The Kit-Kat portraits are now at Bayfordbury, near Hertford, and for the last fifteen years Barn Elms has housed, not publishers or painters, but polo players. The Ranelagh Club was born to help Hurlingham over the water provide grounds for the youngest of the great games naturalised in England. Nine years later Barnes welcomed another club, Roehampton, which added three more grounds to the four of Hurlingham and Ranelagh.
The Boat-race finishes at Mortlake; it starts at Putney, and Putney is the headquarters and the rendezvous of many clubs and rowing men. The Surrey bank from Putney Bridge up stream is a string of club houses, boat houses, and little wooden buildings that do duty for both, and here, on sloping banks sometimes washed by brimming tides, sometimes broad and flat by a shrunken stream on which no racing boat will set its dainty keel, London gathers on March afternoons to wait for the return of the practising crews, and to watch the blue-scarved oarsmen in and out of the boathouses and the balcony windows. There is somewhere an air of the sea-side about that stretch of gravel and open river bank; it is the sunshine on the varnish of the boats, perhaps, or a smell of tar in the wind, or of salt from the weeds that the tides leave dry; or is it the banjo of the occasional nigger blacked to get pence from the waiting crowd? On a September day a year or two ago, when Cambridge within a week was to race Harvard, I saw on that strip of road one of the very last of the genuine London Punch-and-Judy shows. Toby, of course, had gone; dogs may sit no more in frills to cadge for coppers. But the rest of it was correct enough; the chequered canvas, of the proper shade of blue, draped the wooden frame discreetly at the right moment; there was the old interval of suspense, the old, the piercing squeal, the dexterous cock of the red legs over the balcony; the crocodile came and the hangman, and the devil; I watched them all. So did two of the Harvard crew, and did not know their luck. Nothing of English pride stirred in the blood of those two stalwart young men; they walked off even before the turn of the hangman.
East of Putney the river is a thoroughfare of London, and the names along the Surrey side are London names. Lambeth Palace has already included itself in Mrs. E.T. Cook's _Highways and Byways in London_, and so has Vauxhall, and the church of St. Saviour's, Southwark, the finest of all churches which once looked over Surrey fields. But Kennington, no matter how near it lies to London omnibuses and London tube railways, can never be anywhere but in Surrey; Kennington with its memories of the 'Forty-five, and the Chartists, and, a much stronger link with county history than mere memories of the past, Kennington Oval, the visible, flat, noble cricket ground which stands for the story of all Surrey cricket of the past half century. The Oval is scarcely half a mile from Vauxhall Bridge and the river; but it is the centre of the county for those who watch Surrey cricket.
Once the Oval was part of Kennington Common; even in 1845 the solid road which circles the ground was no more than a ditch and a quickset hedge. But a hundred years before 1845! Cricket, even then, was a game in Surrey. Frederick Louis, Prince of Wales, and father of George III, was introducing his favourite pastime to the nobles and the gentlemen. In 1737 Kent played Surrey and London on Kennington Common, and round the pavilion set up for the Prince of Wales there was so great a crush of spectators that a poor woman fell and had her leg broken. The Prince gave her ten guineas. That was a cricketer. And yet, within eight years, Kennington was back among the vilest barbarities of the Middle Ages. The 'Forty-five was to set a mark of ferocious savagery in Kennington annals hardly surpassed by Tyburn. The Earl of Kennington (that, with the nickname of 'Butcher,' was one of the titles of the Duke of Cumberland) had sent to gaol in Southwark nine officers whom he had taken prisoner at Carlisle, fighting for Charles Edward Stuart. They were ordered for execution, and on July 30, at eleven o'clock in the morning, were taken on three sledges to Kennington Common. The gallows were there, the block, the faggots. The prisoners were allowed to pray among themselves. Then they were pinioned and placed in the cart under the gallows; the fires were lighted, the cart moved away. Before they were dead they were cut down, beheaded, disembowelled and their hearts burned in the fire; the executioner, throwing in the heart of the last, who was no more than a boy, cried 'God save King George!' Part of the crowd answered with a shout; the rest looked on in sorrow. The boy who suffered with the elder men was James Dawson, and Shenstone wrote a ballad on his death. He had been engaged to be married to a young girl, who insisted on seeing her lover's last moments. When all was over, she threw herself back in the coach, called to him that she followed him, and as she spoke, died.
Another gathering on Kennington Common might have had more wholesale consequences. The Chartists met there in 1848. Feargus O'Connor was their leader, and he and the petition which the delegates were to take to the House of Commons went out in two large cars. The petition went first, drawn by four horses, and piled up like bales of cotton; the car was decorated with flags, banners, and mottoes, and so were the horses. Then came O'Connor and the delegates, equally superb in bunting. They drove down Holborn and across Blackfriars Bridge, and on Kennington Common an enormous crowd, between 15,000 and 50,000, the different accounts say, received the banners and the delegates with loud cheers. But no bloodshed followed. O'Connor was informed that the crowd could not be allowed to march to the House of Commons, where, indeed, they would have found the Duke of Wellington with cannon. The Chartist leader made two eloquent speeches, and the chairman declared the meeting at an end. The delegates' horses were whipped up so hurriedly that the delegates fell to the bottom of the cart; three cabs drove up and took charge of the bales of petitions, and the meeting was at an end. One detail which the contemporary historian gives of the finish has a fascinating echo half of Ainsworth, half of Dickens. "The horses became restive and began to kick. Then was distinctly heard from many quarters the peculiar cry of the young London thieves." What was it like? Can anybody do it to-day?
The great crowds at Kennington to-day come to see better sights than carts and banners. Surrey cricket has focussed itself at Kennington; rather curiously, it has happened that Surrey plays cricket to-day on no other ground. Kent and Sussex, two neighbours, play their county matches on three grounds or four; Surrey, which has traditions at Mitcham and Dorking, has shrunk back to Kennington only. And Kennington, long ago, was nearly lost to cricket. A year after the Chartists had crowded over the Common, the County Club was in debt for L70. The story of the paying of the debt and the revival of the club has the real ring. The club met and were in despair; they could not hope, with such a debt, to play matches. The Bishop of Tasmania, in his entertaining little _History of Kennington_, tells (in 1889) the story:--
"The meeting almost decided to break up the club; and I suppose, had such a vote been carried, the Oval would have been at once built over and some very happy memories of Kennington would never have existed at all. It is to the present Lord Bessborough that we owe the continuance of Cricket upon the Oval. He was Vice-President at the time, and suggested that the L70 should be paid off by allowing six gentlemen to become Life Members by paying down L12 apiece. A gentleman present next said 'who would pay L12 to be a Life Member of a bankrupt Club?' 'I will,' said Old Mr. Cressingham, one of the oldest members: and 'I will,' said five others, of whom Mr. Ponsonby was one. Lord Bessborough, in writing of this memorable meeting, adds--'Looking back to that distant day I fear I have been a bad bargain to the Club by becoming a Life Member for L12.'"
Nothing of the country and little of the past belongs to Kennington's neighbours. Stockwell, which perhaps sees a hansom as often as a motor-car, once named as a native one of the greatest of English racehorses. Camberwell, when willows grew about a village stream, long since dry, named a butterfly; but Camberwell Beauties, though they sleep sometimes in Surrey woodstacks, and flaunt their white-laced wings in Surrey sunshine perhaps twice in a summer, fly no more by brooks in Camberwell. Perhaps in the old days the Tradescants, who lived near Vauxhall, used to catch them. The Tradescants, father and son, were great naturalists and collectors, and at their house they got together the museum of rarities which after their death came to the Ashmolean Museum at Oxford. John Tradescant the son made a list of them, and though Oxford ungratefully hid the collection in an outhouse and only discovered it again in 1882, many of the curiosities he mentions move undergraduates to surprise to-day. In the original list are strange fowls. 'Some kindes of birds, their egges, beaks, feathers, clawes, and spurres' begin the list of chapters, and then come a crocodile and an 'egge given for a dragon's egge,' and 'Easter egges of the patriarchs of Jerusalem.' 'Two feathers of the phoenix tayle' I do not remember at Oxford, nor 'a cherrystone holding ten dozen tortoiseshell combs, made by Edward Gibbons.' But I think the Ashmolean collection still holds the 'flea chains of silver and gold, with 300 links apiece, and yet but an inch long,' and, of course, the Oxford dodo's skin is famous. It was not a dodo, though, to John Tradescant. It was a 'dodar, from the island of Mauritius: it is not able to flie, being so big.' The wrong thing about it all is that the name of the Tradescants ought to be associated with the collection, and not the name Ashmole. It was never Ashmole's to give to Oxford. Ashmole was a rich and greedy neighbour, and though Tradescant left his museum to his widow and after her death to Oxford, he, the polite Ashmole, bullied Mrs. Tradescant until she signed a paper stating that she had begged him to take the museum for his own. She would have signed anything, poor lady, to get rid of him. She suffered so much from persecution from the generous donor of her husband's museum to Oxford, that she drowned herself in a pond; a few months before having signed a statement that she had 'caused a great heap of earth rubbish to be laid against his garden wall'--doubtless she caused nothing of the sort--'so high that on the 1st day of August last, in the night, by the help thereof, it is strongly presumed that thieves got over the same and robbed the said Mr. Ashmole of 32 cocks and hens.'
Easternmost of Surrey in London, Rotherhithe lies about the docks of the Pool. The Pool should have a book to itself, and will not go into mine; but of Rotherhithe ashore there is a record which deserves keeping. Aubrey, or his later editor, gives a list of the Rotherhithe residents who contributed to the rebuilding of St. Mary's church, and the names, sorted and classified, should be set aside for a future Dickens. Here are a few of them:--Bloice, Figgins, Cuthbert Finkle, Gollop, Cronker, Shadrick Lifter, Walter Mell, Mr. Jeremiah Rosher, Mr. Jonas Shish, Mr. Nathaniel Stiffon, Mr. Matthias Wallraven, Mr. Scroggs, Mr. Jeffery Saffery, Mr. Volentine Teed.
Bermondsey, which has kept the Tooley Street of the Three Tailors, but elsewhere preserves names only instead of stones, has memories of one of the three Surrey Abbeys. It was founded as a priory for Cluniac monks by Alwin Child, a citizen of London, in 1082, and it became an Abbey some three hundred years later. Bermondsey Priory had a church of some note, for in it was a crucifix which the old chronicles describe vaguely as having been found near the Thames. The crucifix attracted special pilgrimages, and when the monasteries were ended, it disappeared. 'There was the pictor of Saynte Saviour that had stood in Barmsey Abbey many yeres in Southwarke takyn down,' a diarist writes at the time. All that remains of the church and crucifix is the name, which has come to St. Saviour's, or the church of St. Mary Overie--the style now is to call it Southwark Cathedral. St. Saviour's belongs to London highways, as I have said, but I may take for Surrey the lines, not already quoted for London, I think, which are set on the tomb of Richard Humble, Alderman of London and ancestor of Wards and Dudleys. The tomb has busied many pens, the verses remain to be read--are they too well known to be written out again?
Like to the damask rose you see Or like the blossom on the tree, Or like the dainty flower of May, Or like the morning of the day, Or like the sun or like the shade, Or like the gourd which Jonas had,
Even so is Man whose thread is spun, Drawn out and cut, and so is done!
The rose withers, the blossom blasteth, The flower fades, the morning hasteth, The sun sets, the shadow flies, The gourd consumes, the man he dies.
Beaumont wrote the lines, legend says; perhaps wrongly, but they have the Elizabethan life and ring.
If one had to choose a dozen square yards of London to sum up the Surrey side, where should they be? For me, there could be no choice. One spot would demand the first, the only place. It would be where Waterloo Bridge touches the Surrey shore; where you may look south to a Surrey hill by Sydenham, and north to half the panorama of London, from St. Paul's to Westminster Abbey. There, on the first few yards of the bridge, above the little hill which shrinks the wide roadway into a neck and stops overladen drays like a wall, blows the aura of all London that crowds south of the river, all Surrey that belongs to the London Thames. The business of the town and the country mingles with the business of the river and the sea. An afternoon in December, the month of months to know London in, is the time to be there. Up stream from the Nore on an east wind rides the damp of salt and of estuary fogs; about you are the steam of sweating horses and the pungent clinging scents of malt and hops and brewing; up on a yellow tide under the arches of the bridge swings a string of barges, piled with bales of hay. A flock of pigeons sways and wheels in the sky, drops to the roofs, settles with a clatter, sails up into the sky again. Black-headed gulls, in their winter suits of dove-colour and white, walk about the muddy edge of the rising tide, drift on the stream like torn paper, soar and hang in the wind above the bridge, peering this way and that for the fish and bread the Londoners give them; or late in the afternoon wing quiet journeys into unknown spaces of western light. Beyond the bridge the lights dot orange sparks in the films and shades of great buildings and the Embankment roadway. That is pure London, and London, too, is most of the Waterloo Road, with its new hospital, and the roar of the trains from the junction, and the old curiosity shops with the foreign names, and the wig-makers, and the cheap furniture spoiling in the rain. But Surrey is there, too; a shop that shows cricket bats, and another that has fruit-ladders, and, above all, the little shops that offer boxes of pansies and delphinium roots and hyacinth bulbs all the seasons round to Surrey men leaving London behind them in the evening. Surrey recollects that she is not quite London in the Waterloo Road; she plays cricket and plants pansies.
That would be the Surrey side I should choose, with the magic of the tide water about it and somewhere, however faint, the scent of the Surrey gardens. But the old, the oldest Surrey side? That belongs to the river-shore south of London Bridge, where once, too, Londoners could cross from crowded wood and brick to walk among Surrey hawthorn and Surrey daisies. The roar and the soot of the Borough have set that strip of country deep in London, hardly divided by the water. But it was there, when Chaucer's nine-and-twenty pilgrims lay at the Tabard inn, that Surrey began for Londoners and for all who had come to the 'dere and sweete citye' of which Chaucer sings to journey south from the Thames on a pilgrimage to Canterbury. The Tabard inn is no more; the fire that swept over Southwark ten years after the fire of London destroyed the building Chaucer knew. The piety of a later day raised another Tabard, perhaps like the old Tabard with the same galleries and balustrades to look down from upon pilgrims and minstrels and monks and fools. But that Tabard inn became the Talbot in a careless age, and as the Talbot it was razed to the ground forty years ago, when nobody minded what became of the old inns and churches and the things best worth keeping in old Surrey. The Tabard has gone, but the ancient road remains. Smoke and stone are about it, where once it stretched out bare among green fields; but the fields are there, for those who can see them, behind the veil of smoke, and through them a wayfarer may still travel with the Knight who loved freedom and courtesy, the Monk shaking his belled bridle, the Ploughman on his mare, and the dainty fingered Prioress with her eyes as grey as glass, riding to join other pilgrims travelling east to Canterbury by the old road.
INDEX
A
Abbot, George, Archbishop of Canterbury, 72, 74-6, 80, 317, 360
Abbot, Robert, Bishop of Salisbury, 80
Abbot's Hospital, 65, 72-4, 83
Abbot, Sir Maurice, 80
A Becket, 2, 3
Abinger, 101, 165, 320-2
Abinger Hatch, 320-2
_Adam Bede_, 214
Addington, 357, 368, 378
Addison, 138
Addlestone, 180, 206, 208
Ady, Mrs. Henry, 58
_Airly Beacon_, 150
Akehurst, Alexander, 285
Alastor, 202
Albany, Duchess of, 275
Albury, 10, 59, 69, 87, 91, 100-2, 105-7 Park, 10, 106-7, 321, 330
Aldersey, John, 419
Aldershot, 14, 16, 209
Alexander I. of Russia, 126
Alfold, 109, 156, 163-7
Alfred, King, 65
Alfred, son of Ethelred, 66-7
Allen, Grant, 150
Alleyn, Edward, 425-6
Allingham, Mrs., 145, 153
Allnutt, Sidney, 90
_All the Year Round_, 309
Alton, 18, 65
Alvanley, Lord, 196
Amelie, Queen, 194, 275
_Anastasius_, 329
_Ancestor, the_, 292
Anchor inn, Ripley, 222
Andre J.L., 60, 310
Andrewes, Nicholas, 132-3
Angel inn, Guildford, 80-2
Angell family, the, 409-10
Angler's inn, Kingston, 244
_Annals of an Old Manor House_, 93
Anne, Queen, 102, 124, 127, 165, 234, 264, 370 of Bohemia, 240 of Cleves, 395 of Denmark, 195, 234
Anstiebury Camp, 59, 326, 336
_Archaeological Collections, Surrey_, 60, 78, 112, 194, 234, 310, 326, 332, 338, 350, 375, 380, 396, 415, 422
Archbishop's Palace, Croydon, 357
Arderne, family, 332
Armada, the, 103, 257, 273, 277, 350
Armstrong, Colonel, 196
Arnold, Matthew, 294
Arundel, family, 124 Earl of, 136, 271, 311
Arundell, Archbishop, 358 Sir Thomas, 93
Arun Junction Canal, 167
Ashmole, Elias, 436-7
Ashmolean Museum, 436
Ashley-Cooper, F.S., 382
Ashtead, 285, 296
Aston, a yeoman family, 338
Aubrey, John, 32-3, 35, 50, 53, 71-2, 80, 99, 119, 165, 186, 247, 277, 210-13, 216, 219, 311, 319, 323-4, 329-30, 337-8, 365, 374-5, 398, 425, 437
Audley, Major, 249, 348
Austen, Jane, 82, 286-7
Austin, John, and Mrs., 194
Aylward, James, 41 John, 84
B
Bacon, family, 382
Bagshot, 14, 210-12 Heath, 187, 199, 209, 211, 216
_Bait, the_, 231
Bank-notes, 101
Banstead, 270, 273 Downs, 264, 272, 348
Baring-Gould, S., 150, 157
Barker, Thomas, 148
Barley Mow inn, Tilford, 41
Barn Elms, 432
Barnes Bridge, 431-2
Baron's Caves, the, 346
Barrow Green House, 419
Barr's Nurseries, 253
Bat and Ball inn, 42
Battle of Dorking, 203, 309
Battle of the Books, the, 45
Bax, Alfred, 338
Bayly, Miss Ada, 25
Baynards, 174 Station, 163
Bear inn, Esher, 277-8
Bearbaiting, 94
Bearhurst, 326
Beaumont, 438
Beckingham, Robert, 80
Beddington, 357, 365, 367-8
Beerbohm, Max, 187
Beighton, Thomas, 205
Beldham, William, "Silver Billy," 40-2, 351
Belgians, king of the, 275
Bell inn, Godstone 390 Oxted, 109, 417
Belloc, Hilaire, 5, 10
_Bell's Life in London_, 214
Bellson, Augustine, 314
Bendigo, 278
Bentley, 15, 45, 171
Beorhtwulf, king of the Mercians, 336
Bermondsey, 59 Priory, 437
Berners family, 120
Bertie, Emily, 29
Bessborough, Lord, 435
Betchworth, 109, 292-3, 332, 344 Castle, 330
_Bettesworth_, 30, 56-7
Bilson, Bishop, 16
Birkenhead, Sir John, 132
Bishops' Gate, 202-3
Bisley, 95, 209, 212, 214-5, 430
_Blanche Heriot, Legend of Chertsey Church_, 185
Black adder, the, 327
Black Cherry Fair, 184
Black Down, 97, 141-5, 172, 324
Blackheath, 178
Black Horse, inn, Gomshall, 114
_Blackwood's Magazine_, 309
Bletchingley, 344, 348, 352, 383, 390-8 Castle, 394-5
Blois, Henry of, 2, 16
Bloody Assizes, the, 285
Bludworth, Sir Thomas, 285
Boar's Hill, 326
Boat-race, the University, 431-2 Cambridge v. Harvard, 433
Bodleian, the Library, 127, 415
Bog-myrtle, 210
_Boke of St. Aldan's_, the, 120
Boleyn, Anne, 93, 369, 395, 412-13
Bookham, 115, 320 Great, 120, 122-5 Little, 120-2
_Book of Martyrs_, the, 351
Borough Hill, 32
Boswell, James, 316
Boulenger, G.A., 327
Bourgeois, Sir Francis, 426
Bourne, George, 56
Bourne, river, Chertsey, 180 stream, 23, 30-1
Bowen's map of Surrey, 103, 130
Box Hill, 11, 125, 304-7
Boyle Farm, 251
Bradshaw, John, 257
Braganza, Katharine of, 76
Bramley, 90, 97-8, 131
Bramshott Grange, 150
Bray Chapel, St. George's, Windsor, 110 Ellen, 290 family, 69, 110 William, 110-12, 131
Brayley's _History of Surrey_, 313
Brereton, Sir William, 362
Brewer, Dr., 364
Brewer Street, 392
Bridger, Lowther, 257
Bright, J.S., 311, 327, 329
Bristol, Countess of, 31
Broad Halfpenny Down, 42
Brocas, Arnold of Beaurepaire, 77 Sir Bernard, 136
Brockham, 330
Brooklands, 192-3
Brookwood, 212
_Broom Squire_, the, 150, 157, 161
Broom Squires, 150-1
Brougham, 304
Brown, "Capability," 117, 328
Browne, Sir Anthony and Geraldine, 120 Sir Thomas, 330
Brummell, Beau, 196
Buckarel, Stephen, 290
Buckhurst, Lord, 261
Buckingham, Dukes of, 211, 249, 395, 432
Buckland, 333-4
Buckland, Frank, 93, 228
Buckle, family, 273
Bunyan, John, 6, 96-7
Burdett, Sir Francis, 430
Burford Bridge, 11, 298, 304-5
Burghley, Lord, 428
_Burial of the Boroughs_, the, 144
Burke, Edmund, 274
Burne-Jones, Edward, 141
Burney, Dr., 274-5, 299-301 Fanny (Madame d'Arblay), 20, 122, 274-5, 299-301
Burrell, Peter, 142
Burstow, 383-5, 392
Bush inn, Farnham, 25-6
Buxton, Mrs., 222
Byfleet, 180, 193, 218, 233, 253, 287, 321
Bysshe family, 383
C
Cabal, the, 237
Caesar, Julius, 1, 198, 257, 313, 326 cricketer, 351
Caffyn, William, 351
Camberley, 209
Camberwell Beauties, 436
Cambridge, Duke of, 430
Cambridge-Harvard boat-race, 433
Camden, 80, 298
_Camilla_, 122, 301
Camilla Lacey, 299, 301
Campbell, Thomas, 304
Canning, 430
Canterbury, 2-7, 336, 344, 439
Capel, 338, 341
Capell, family of, 124
Carew, family of, 142, 365 Sir Nicholas, 365, 395
Caroline, Queen, 134
Carshalton, 357, 365, 368-70
Carter, Francis, 66
Caryll, John, 99
Cassivellaunus, 258, 428
Castle inn, Kingston, 244
Castlereagh, Lords, 251, 430
Caterham, 375, 390
Cawarden, Sir Thomas, 395-6
Cecil family, the, 428
_Cecilia_, 301
Cedars, 16, 197, 301-2
Chaldon, 78-9, 357, 374-6, 390
Chalk Hill Blues, 87
Chanctonbury Ring, 54, 152, 324, 356
Chandos, Sir John, 405
Chantrey, sculptor, 304
Chantries, the, 9
Charles I., 19, 27, 104, 119-20, 195, 211, 257, 358, 428 II., 38, 69, 71, 76, 105, 120, 165, 182, 260, 271, 312, 385, 393
Charlotte, Princess, bride of Prince Leopold, 275 Queen, 16, 196, 241
Charlwood, 385-8
Charterhouse, 36, 80, 138
Chart's Edge, 421-2
Chaucer, 13, 45, 439
Cheam, 270, 272
Chelsham, 378
Chertsey, 42, 124, 179-189, 206, 209, 221, 432 Abbey, 180-184
Chesney, Sir George, 203, 309
Chessington, 270, 274-5
Chesterfield, Lord, 251
Chiddingfold, 109, 156, 163, 167-8, 171, 206, 399
Child, Alwin, 437
Chilworth, 26, 72, 85, 87, 89, 95, 98-104, 178
Chinthurst Hill, 99
Chipstead, 375-6
Chobham, 180, 209-16 Common, 187, 199, 209-10, 212-13
Clandon, East, 118-19, 287 Park, 117-19, 368 West, 118, 287
Claremont, 275
Clark, John, 27
Claygate, 273
Clayton Arms, Godstone, 390-1, 399 Sir Robert, 393, 397-8
Clive, Lord, 275
Cobbett, Richard, 168 William, 22-6, 30, 38, 40, 85-6, 101, 106, 154-6, 161, 168, 317, 352, 355, 390-2
Cobham, 82, 95, 198, 279, 292-3 family, of Sterborough, 404-8
Coldharbour, 109, 324-6, 338
Cole, Sir Henry, 362 Robert, 377
Coleridge, S.T., 304
Collier's Water Farm, 364
Collins, Mortimer, 304
Colwall, Daniel, 83
Colyear, David, 1st Lord Portmore, 198
Compton, 7, 8, 43, 59-61, 109
Connaught, Duke of, 212
Cook, Mrs. E.T., 433 Theodore Andrea, 265
Cooper's Hill, 18, 187, 203-5
Cope, Sir John, 73
Copley family, the, 332, 352
Copthorne poachers, 403
Cordite, 105
Cotmandene, 313, 329
Coulsdon, 357, 373-4
Court of Pie-powder, 97
Coverts, family of, 136
Cow inn, Haslemere, 142
Coway Stakes, 257
Cowley, Abraham, 182-3, 329, 432
Cowper, 364
Cranleigh, 97, 173-8
Cranmer, 358
Crawley, 354-5, 385
Crecy, 402, 405
Cressingham, Old Mr., 435
Cricket, first mention of, 94
Crisp, Samuel, 274-5
Cromwell, Oliver, 15, 198, 258, 344 Thomas, 52, 428
Crooksbury Hill, 30, 36, 53-4, 317
Crossways Farm, 320-1
Crouch oak, 208
Crowhurst, 386, 389-90, 408-13 Place, 100, 289, 410-13 yew, 171, 408-9
Crown inn, Chiddingfold, 168-9, 399
_Crown of Wild Olive_, the, 368
Croydon, 74, 219, 357-64, 373-4, 376, 378-9, 423 Palace, 357, 362, 365
Cruikshank, George, 420, 422
Crystal Palace, 187, 199, 324, 424
Cuckoo Hill, 216
Cumberland, Duke of, 200, 202, 434
Curfew bell, 184-5
Cuthred, a Christian prince, 374
D
D'Abernon family, the, 289-92
Dandies' Fete, the, 251
Dawson, James, 434
d'Arblays, the, 20, 122-3, 299, 300-1
de Arderne, Sir Thomas, 332
de Bienfaite, Richard, 290
de Braose, family of, 332
de Calva, Ruald, 227
de Clare, family, 344, 346, 382, 394
de Dammartin, Odo and William, 414
De Foe, 314
de la Hale, Sir Edward, 341
de la Hay, Peter, 303
de la Poyle, Henry, 9
de la Zouche, Alan, 340
de Lally Tollendal, 299
de Montfort, 2, 345-6, 394
de Narbonne, 299
de Poynings, Nicholas and Margery, 332
de Rupibus, Peter, 83
de Rutherwyk, John, 124, 181-2, 207
de Stangrave, John, 411
de Tonebrige, family, 2, 394
de Warenne, family, 2, 344-8, 351, 382
Dean Swift's cottage, 48
Deans, Jeanie, 238
Decamp, Mademoiselle, 208
Deepdene, 328-30
Denbies, 11, 316-7
Denham, Sir John, 18, 19, 203-7
Derby, horse-race, the, 264-5 Lord, 251, 260, 264, 268, 272
Derrick, John, 94
Desbouveries, family, 374
Detilens, 421
Devil's Dyke, 87, 149, 356
Devil's Jumps, the, 35-6, 153-4
Devil's Punch Bowl, 147-8, 150
Dickens, Charles, 184, 309-10
Dingate, Stephen, 351
Ditton Hill tulips, 254 Marsh, 278
_Diversions of Purley_, 379
Donkeytown, 216
Donne, John, 21, 137, 231, 427
Dorchester, Countess of, 198
Dorking, 2, 11, 95, 125, 199, 203, 249, 286, 296, 298, 304, 308-17, 326-9, 330, 332, 348, 373, 435
Doyle, Sir Arthur Conan, 145
Drake, Sir Francis, 103, 257, 277 Richard, 277
Drax, S.E., 428
Druids' Walk, the, 301
Drummond, Henry, 69, 106
Dryden, John, 188, 397, 432
Dudley family, the, 437
Duke of Wellington inn, East Horsley, 121
Dulwich, 424-7
Dunsfold, 156, 163-5, 167, 170
Duerer, Albrecht, 352
Durdans, 259, 261, 268
Durfold, 163
Dusty-Feet, Court of, 97
E
_Earwig, the_, pamphlet, 29
Eashing, 135-6
Eastlands, 191
Eclipse, 264-5 Stakes, 278
Ede, printer of Brayley's Surrey, 313
Edgehill, 249
Edward I., 16, 69, 82, 346 II., 69, 82, 234, 388, 400 III., 69, 70, 240, 247, 365, 405, 411 IV., 69 VI., 80, 362, 395 The Black Prince, 405 The Elder, 246 The Martyr, 246
Eel Pie Island, 236
Effingham, 120, 122, 350
Egerton family, 198
Egham, 180, 204-6
Eliot, George, 145-6, 161-2
Elizabeth, 16, 38, 69, 70, 84, 93, 103, 121, 137-8, 142, 195, 208, 213, 231, 240, 257, 271, 273, 277, 288, 318, 332, 358, 361-2, 365, 378, 395, 415, 425, 428
Ellingbrygges, family of, 369, 376-7
Elmer, S., 29
Elstead, 39, 137, 153, 158, 165
_Emma_, 82, 286-7
_Endymion_, 304
Englefield Green, 203
Enticknaps, family of, 168
Epsom, 97, 126, 199, 210, 259-71, 274, 284-5, 296, 357, 372
Erle, T.W., 150 Sir William, 150
Ermyn Street, 11, 296
Esher, 147, 194, 259, 274-8, 286 Common, 275, 279 Lord, 271
_Essay upon the Ancient and Modern Learning_, 44
Ethelstan, 246, 336
Ethelwulf, 336
_Evelina_, 274-5, 301
Evelyn, John, of Wotton, 100, 103, 105-6, 112, 182, 197, 202, 211, 311, 317, 319, 328, 397 family, 103-5, 142, 319, 323, 391
Evershed family, 338
Ewell, 270-2
Ewhurst, 173-8, 337
F
Fairfax, 198
Farley, 378 Heath, 174, 177-8
Farncombe, 126, 134
Farnham, 2, 4, 7, 14-29, 30, 36, 40-3, 48, 55, 57, 59, 62, 65, 70-1, 83, 86, 95, 126, 140, 158, 210, 240, 344, 419 Castle, 14, 16-8, 71, 301
Farquhar, Lady Mary, 125
Farthing Down, 374
_Father of the forest, the_, 88
Feathers inn, Kingston, 247
Fellowes, Sir John, 370
Fennex, William, 42
Fenwick, Margaret, 332
Fetcham, 120, 125, 280
Fete Champetre, 272
Ferdinand VII. of Spain, 352
_Fidelia_, 18
Fielding, Henry, 113 Anna Maria, 208
_Field Paths and Green Lanes_, 142, 148, 176, 302, 309, 351, 391
Finch, family of, 124
Flamsteed, Rev. J., 385
Flower, John Wickham, 374
Flying Childers, 265
Fold Country, the, 109, 163-173
Forest Green, 338
Forster, Anne, 410
Foster, Birket, 153, 161
Fox, Bishop, 15, 16, 20 Charles James, 186-8
Foxe, martyrologist, 351
Foxwarren Park, 222
Frederick, Prince of Wales, 241, 433-4
Frederick William, King of Prussia, 126
Fredley Farm, 303
Frensham, 14, 30-42, 47, 141, 210 Ponds, 34, 36-8, 53
Friday Street, 109, 320, 322-3, 325-6
Frimley, 209, 211, 213-14
Fryer, John, Evelyn's tutor, 319
Fuller, Bostock, 415-16 Thomas, 298, 377
Fuller's earth, 399-400
G
Gainsford, family of, 124, 369, 386, 409-12
Garbage Green, 168
_Garden, the_, 182
_Gardens of Epicures_, the, Essay on, 43
Garratt's Hall, Banstead, 273
Garrick, David, 205
Gatton, 332, 351-2, 393 Park, 11
Gaveston, Piers, 234
Gay's _Beggar's Opera_, 393
_Gentleman's Magazine_, the, 118, 142
George I., 310, 349, 368 II., 357 III., 16, 31, 103, 122, 196, 241, 251, 433 inn, Farnham, 25-6 Prince of Denmark, 264 Prince of Wales (Geo. IV.), 78, 241
Gibbet Hill, Hindhead, 147, 149-51
Gibbon, Edward, the historian, 244, 318
Gibbons, Grinling, 21
Gibraltar, capture of, 370
Giffard, Lady, 45 William, 48
Giggs Hill, 253
Gilpin, John, 364
Giuseppi, Montague, 105
Gloucester, Duchess of, 251 Dukes of, 184, 407
Godalming, 25, 36, 61, 70-1, 85, 95, 126-38, 153, 159, 167, 171, 199
Godstone, 12, 103-4, 389-92, 399, 403, 414
Godwin, Mary, 202
Gofayre, Richard, 168
Goffe, Thomas, 119
Golden Farmer, inn, Bagshot, 211
Goldies, the, Cambridge oarsmen, 432
Goldsmith, Oliver, 196
Gomshall, 10, 11, 100, 101, 114-15, 206, 320
Goodwine, John, 383
Goose and Onion Fair, 184
Gordon, Adam, 69
Gracious Pond, 216
Grantley, Lord, 98-9
Grattan, 304, 430
Graves, Charles, 122
Grayshott, 149
Great Fosters, 206
Greenhill, 367
Greenwich, 86, 428
Gresham family, the, 422
Greville, Charles, 196
Grey, Sir George, 80 Lady Jane, 395
Grimes, _Grim the Collier_, 362
Grindal, Archbishop, 358, 361
Grote, George, 114, 304, 419 Harriet, 114, 419
Guildford, 8-10, 23, 25, 53, 55, 57, 59, 61-87, 89, 93-4, 96-9, 101, 115, 125, 129-131, 171, 174, 199, 214, 218-19, 290, 344, 360, 373, 400, 417
Guildford Castle, 66, 68, 71, 290
_Guildford in the Olden Time_, 68
Guizot, 194
Gunpowder-making, 102-5
Gwyn, Mrs., 196
Gwynne, Nell, 260-1
Gypsies, 279
H
Hale Bourne, river, 216
Haling House, 350
Hall, Edward, 407 Harry, 41 Samuel Carter, 208
Ham, 235-7 House, Portmore, 197-8
Hambledon, 41, 165, 170-2 Club, 221-2
Hamilton, Charles, 294 Lady Betty, 272
Hammerton, Abram and Hester, 246
Hampton Court, 186, 235, 254
Hampton, William, 393
Hanbury, Sir Thomas, 232
_Handbook of Epsom_, 303
Hanging Wood, Tanbrige Hill, 12
Harefoot, Harold, 66-7
Harold, 336
Harpe, a yeoman family, 338
Harris, Dr. Nathaniel, 392-3
Harrison, Clifford, 185 Frederic, 93
Harrow, 187 inn, Kingston, 244 way, 3, 7
Harte, Bret, 213
Harvard-Cambridge boat-race, 433
Hascombe, 167, 170-1, 324
Haslemere, 127, 134, 139-53, 393
Hastings, 336
Hatchlands, 119-20
Hawkins, Peter, 73-4
Headley, 270, 274
Heales, Major, 380
_Heart of Midlothian, the_, 237
_Heathen Chinee_, the, 213
Heath, Nicholas, Archbishop of York, 213
Heaths, family cricket eleven, 95, 382
Henley-on-Thames, 87, 152
Henry II., 2, 68, 118 III., 69, 346, 394 IV., 82 V., 240 VI., 69, 184-5, 330, 409 VII., 69, 82, 240, 377, 412 VIII., 69, 82, 93, 121, 136, 182, 195, 234, 254, 271, 277, 283, 351-2, 377, 395, 413 of Otelands, 195, 197
_Herbert, Life of_, Walton's, 21
Herne Hill, 423-4
Herring, Thomas, 393
Hether, a yeoman family, 338
Hever Castle, 413
Highcombe Bottom, 151
Highdown Ball, 171
_Highways and Byways in London_, 433
Hindhead, 14, 25, 36, 54, 85, 87, 97, 139-53, 156, 162, 177, 210, 324, 337
Hod, William, 290
Hogarth, William, 134
Hog's Back, 7, 8, 55-63, 82, 95, 324, 356
Hogsmill, the river, 103, 244, 270
Holland, Lord, Royalist Leader, 2, 249, 348-9 Lord, and Lady (Fox family), 188-9
Holloway College, 204
Holmbury, 316, 326, 337-8
Holmwood, 322
Holt Forest, 23
Home, Gordon, 268
Honeywood, Robert, 247
Honywood, Sarah, 205
Hood, Thomas, 237
Hook, J.C., 161
_Hooker, Life of_, Walton's, 21
Hope, Thomas ("Anastasius"), 328-30
Hopkins, John (Vulture Hopkins), 428-9
Horley, 292, 380-3, 385, 392
Horne, 383
Horn Hatch, 96
Horse and Groom inn, Merrow, 115-6
Horsell, 95, 217-8
Horsham, 174
Horsley, East, 95, 120-1 West, 95, 119-21
Hoskins, Charles and Ann, 419
Hounslow, 348
Howard, family, 122, 329, 397 Catherine, 395 of Effingham, first Lord, William, 121, 350-1 second Lord (Earl of Nottingham), 103, 121, 318, 350
Howleigh, Archbishop, 378
Hugh, Abbot of Winchester, 180
Hull, Richard, 323
Humble, Richard, 437
Humphrey, Tom, cricketer, 313
Hunt, Mrs., 391 Hurts, Burstow, 383-4, 392 Chiddingfold, 172 Lord Leconfield's, 171
Hurlingham, 432
Hurst Castle, 28 Park, 254
Hurt Wood, 177
Huskisson, 304
Hutchinson, Dr. Jonathan, 141
Hut Pond, Ripley, 224
Huts Hotel, Hindhead, 148
Hutton, Archbishop, 362 Richard Holt, 203
I
Icehouse, Wood, 59
_Idylls of the King_, the, 214
Ifold, 163
Imber Court, 251
_Intelligencer, the_, 393
Iron-smelting, 157, 410
J
James I., 16, 66, 74, 83, 104, 137, 195, 219, 234, 240, 383, 424-5, 428 II., 19, 43, 105, 165, 197, 261, 285 Major-General E. Renouard, 5, 8, 9
Jeffrey, 304
Jeffreys, Judge, 285
Jekyll, Gertrude, 130-1
Jennings, Louis, 142, 148, 176, 301, 309, 351, 391, 397
"Jessamy Bride, the," 196
John, King, 51, 66, 69, 97, 100, 107, 114, 204, 345, 347
Johnson, Dr., 144, 268, 274, 316, 426-7
Johnson, Esther, 45
Johnston, Philip Mainwaring, 284, 322, 379
Jolly Farmer inn, Farnham, 22 Bagshot, 211
Jonson, Ben, 426
Jordan, Family of Gatwick, 388
Juniper Hall, 299, 301-3
Jupp, Henry, 313
_Justitiarius Justificatus_, 18
Juxon, Archbishop, 359
K
Keats, 304-5
Kemble family, 170, 190-1, 194, 208
Kenley, 373
Kennington, 253, 313, 433-6
Kettlebury Hill, 154
Kew, 23, 233, 235, 244
King, Dr. William, 143 Family of, 193, 225-6
King's Arms, Bagshot, 211 Godalming, 126-7, 131
King's Head, Dorking, 309, 311 Epsom, 260-1
Kingsley, Charles, 73, 150
King's Oak, 39, 40
King's Prize at Bisley, 215
Kingston, 18, 103, 148, 186, 219, 235, 244-9, 250, 348
Kingston, Evelyn, Duke of, 31
Kingswood, 274
Kinnersley Manor, 355
Kipling, Rudyard, 116-7, 337, 378
Kirke's Lambs, 76
Kitkat Club, 432
Kneller, Sir Godfrey, 432
Knightley, name in Leatherhead Register, 286
Knowle, 173
Kyngham, the, 248
L
Ladder of Life, the, 374-5
Lady Susan, a tame wild sow, 93
Lamb, Charles, 252
Lambert, family of, 124, 273 William, 42
Lambert's Oaks, 264
Lambeth, 350-1, 377, 433
Langton, Stephen, 69, 90, 347
Latton family, the, 277
Laud, Archbishop, 72, 358
Lauderdale, Duke of, 237
Lawrence, Sir Thomas, 304
Layton, Dr. Richard, 52
Lea, 151
Leatherhead, 82, 95, 115, 120, 125, 199, 280-7, 292, 296, 298 Church, 284-6
Leconfield, Lord, 171
Leech, John and Mehetabel, of Lea, 161 draughtsman, 185
_Legend of Chertsey, the_, 186
Leigh, 332, 334, 352, 383
Leith Hill, 3, 54, 87, 149, 316, 319-27, 335-8, 341
Lennox, Colonel, 430
Leoni, 117, 368
Leopold, King of the Belgians, 275
Lewes, 2, 345-6
Lewis, Monk, 196
Lilly, William, astrologer, 258
Limpsfield, 390, 414, 419-21
Linacre, Thomas, 377
Lincoln, Earl of, 196-7
Lingfield, 350, 390, 401-8
_Literature and Dogma_, 294
"Little Comedy," 196
Livesey, Sir Michael, captain of horse, 249, 348
Livingstone, John, 263
Lloyd, Eleanor, 194
Loch Leven trout, 145
Locked churches, 120, 125
Lockhart, Scott's biographer, 304
Locks, family of, Norbury Park, 299-301
Lockyer, Tom, 351
Londonderry, Lord, 430
Long Ditton, 251, 253
Long, Edward Noel, 57
Longley, Archbishop, 378
Long Parliament, the, 104
Lonsdale, Lord, 354-5
Lord's cricket ground, 41
Loseley, 53, 77, 136-8, 174, 231, 395-6
Louis Philippe, 194, 275, 277
_Love in the Valley_, 306
Lovekyn's Chapel, Kingston, 244
Lucas, E.V., 286
_Luck of Roaring Camp, the_, 213
Ludlam, Mother, a witch, 32, 47
Lumley, family of, 72, 272
Lunatic asylums, 378
Lyall, Edna, 25
Lyttelton, Lord, 268-9
M
Macaulay, Lord, 278, 301, 304, 361
Macdonald, George, 145
Machyn's _Diary_, 313
Madderson, Richard, 315
_Magna Charta_, 204, 346
Malden, H.E., 326, 338, 348, 382
Malthus, David, 320
Manning, Owen, 111-2, 131
Mapp, Hill, 264
Marlborough, Duke of, 234
Marlowe, 231
Marquis of Granby inn, Dorking, 308-9
Marshall, William, 292
Martyr, John, 83
Mary, Queen (1553), 82, 121, 395 (1688), 45, 213, 271 Queen Of Scots, 16, 257
Mawby, Sir Joseph, 261
May-games, 248
Maypole Dancing, 59
_Memoirs of a Surrey Labourer_, 30, 56
Merchant Adventurers, Company of, 71
Meredith, George, 305-6, 320
_Merlinus Anglicus Junior_, 258
Merriman, Dr., 80
Merrow, 101, 115-7
Merstham, 11, 375-7, 391
Merton, 427
Mew, Bishop Peter, 19
Michel, Louise, 289
Mickleham, 282, 285, 296-9, 303
_Middlemarch_, 145
Middleton, Dr. Conyers, 171
Midleton, Lords, 136, 141
Mildmay, Sir Henry, 307
Milford, 139, 159, 160, 167
Mill, John Stuart, 304
Millet, Jean Francois, 236
Milton, 45
Mitcham, 210, 330, 427, 435
Mitchell, Frances, 234
Mitchells, a family cricket eleven, 96, 382
Mole, the river, 11, 219, 275, 282-5, 287, 289, 292-4, 298-9, 304-7, 330
Molesey, East and West, 254
Molyneux, James More, 142
Monmouth, Duke of, 2, 19, 72
Monson, Lord, 352-3
Moor Park, 30, 32, 43-54
Moore, Colonel Thomas, 124 Tom, 251-2, 304
_Moorland Idylls_, 150
Morasteen, Kingston, 245-6
More, Sir Christopher, 136 Sir George, 137, 231 Sir Thomas, 174 Sir William, 53, 77, 136-8
Mores, family of, 142
Morley, Bishop, 19, 21
Morris dances, 248
Mortlake, 431-2
Morton, Mrs. Mary, 247
Munstead, 129
Mynn, Alfred, 351
_Mystery of the Old Cause, the_, 362
_My Winter Garden_, 150
N
Nash, Beau, 261 Thomas, 425
National Gallery, 29 Rifle Association, 215, 430
_Neighbours on the Green_, 203
Nelson, Lord, 304, 427
Nemours, Duchess of, 194, 275
Netley, 87
Nettlebed, 87, 152
Nevill, Ralph, 65, 131, 164
Newark Priory, 219, 221, 227-9
Newcastle, Duke of, 188, 196-7
Newdigate, 165, 341-2
Newhaven, 149
Newland, Abraham, 103
Newland's Corner, 10, 87-8, 101, 103, 140, 177
Newton, Isaac, 385
Nicholas, family, 120
Nicholson, Sir Charles, 99
Nixon, Francis, 427
Nonsuch, 219, 260-1, 284, 351
Norbury, 20 Lady Anne, 290 Park, 286, 299, 301, 303
Norfolk, Dukes of, 16, 121, 313-4, 329, 350
Nork House, 273
North, Bishop, 16
Northumberland, Duke of, 106
Norton, George, 99, 252
Norwood, 424
_Notebook of a Surrey Justice_, 415
Nottingham, Earl of, 103, 121
Novel's Oak, 39
Nutfield, 70, 383, 398-400
Nyren, John, 40-42, 221
O
Oaks, historic trees, 38 Horse-race, the, 264-5
Oakwood, 341
Oatlands, 188, 190-2, 195-7, 219, 249
Ockham, 224-7
Ockley, 313, 326-7, 335-41
O'Connor, Feargus, 434
Odo of Bayeux, Bishop, 90
Oglethorpe, family of, 134, 142-4
Ognersh, 98
Old customs at Dorking, 311-3 King's Head inn, Croydon, 364 _Oak Chair_, the, 421 Queen's Head inn, Nutfield, 399 _Road, The_, 5 _West Surrey_, 130 Woking, 218
Oliphant, Mrs., 203
Onslow, family of, 18, 103, 117, 119, 142 Sir Arthur, 76, 80, 251, 317
Orleans, Duke of, 406 Duchess of, 194
Osborne, Dorothy (Lady Temple), 45
Ossory, Lord, 132
Outwood, 383-4
Oval, Kennington, 253, 313, 433, 435
Oxted, 11, 109, 390, 414, 416-9
P
Pains Hill, 294-5
Pallinghurst Farm, 164
Palmerston, Lord, 80, 393
Paris, Comte de, 194
Parker, Archbishop, 358
Parkhurst, John, Bishop of Norwich, 80 Mr., 261
Parr, Katherine, 428
_Paul and Virginia_, 320
Paulet family, 124
Paull, John, 430
Penfold, J.W., 144
Penny Pot, 216
Peperharow, 136
Pepys, Samuel, 81, 211, 260, 271
Perrers, Alice, 247
Peterborough, Countess of, 397
_Peter Porcupine_, 22
Petersham, 180, 235, 237
Peter, the Great, 127
Pevensey Castle, 344
Pewley Hill, 10, 86-7
Phillips, Mrs., 299, 300
Phoenician Traders, 1
Picard Nicholas, 290
_Pied Puldreaux_, or Pie Powder, Court of, 97
Pierrepont House, 31
Pilch, Fuller, 351
_Pilgrim s Progress_, 6, 96-7
Pilgrim's Way, 1-13, 58, 96, 355, 373, 376
Pirbright, 63, 209
Pitch Hill, 177
Pit Place, Epsom, 268
Pitt, William, 188, 430
_Pleasure Excursions_, 363
Plough Inn, Cobham, 292 Coldharbour, 325
Pokeford, Peter, 168
Polesden, 125, 317
Pope, 428-9, 432
_Porch House_, 182, 184
Porson, 304
Portman, Sir William, 72
Portmore Park, 190, 197
Portmore, First Lord, 198
Pownall, historian of Epsom, 260-2, 264-6
_Praeterita_, 363, 423-4
Prince Bluecher inn, Effingham, 121
Prize-fighting, 214
_Promenade round Dorking_, 301, 317
_Province of Jurisprudence Determined_, the, 194
Purley, 373-4, 379
Putney, 244, 276, 430, 432-3
Puttenham, 7, 58-9, 61-2
Pyrcroft, 184
Pyrford, 218, 221, 229, 231-2, 287
Q
Queen Alexandra Nursing Home, 119
Queen's, The, Regiment, 76
Quelche, William, 369
R
Rack Close, 71
Radcliffe, John, 370
Raglan, Lord, 124-5
Rainbow trout, 145
Raleigh, Sir Walter, 121
Randall's, 286-7
Randyll, Sir Edward, 104
Ranelagh Club, 432
Ranmer Church and Common, 199, 274, 317
Rapley family, the, 339-41
Ray, John, 157
Read, Maurice, 253 W.W., 351
_Recollections of Brighton_, 35
Red Cross inn, Reigate, 349
Redhill, 334, 356, 390, 398
Red Lion inn, Betchworth, 331 Dorking, 311, 315 Godalming, 131 Guildford, 80-2 Thursley, 147, 153
Reigate, 2, 11, 42, 85, 87, 122, 214, 249, 328, 330, 332, 334, 344-56 Castle, 249, 344-6, 348, 351 Heath, 334, 349
Reve, Henry, 103
Reynolds, Sir Joshua, 29, 274
Richardson, Charles, 172 the Novelist, 113 Tom, 253
Richard I., 227 II., 120, 136, 240 III., 184
Richmond, 23, 235-43, 277, 431
Rifle clubs, 88
Ripley, 93, 221-5, 227, 287
Risbridger, the family, 113
Robinson, Mrs., 29, 203
Roehampton, 432
Rogers, Samuel, 187, 196
Roman camps, 175, 177-8, 287 villa at Titsey, 422
Rookery, the, 320
Roper, Margaret, 174
Rose and Crown inn, Godstone, 390
Rosebery, Lord, 259, 268
Rotherhithe, 103, 437
Round, J.H., 292
Rumming, Eleanour, 283-4
Runemede, 200, 204, 347
Running Horse, inn, Leatherhead, 282-3
Rupert, Prince, 18, 211, 249
_Rural Rides_, 23-5, 85, 382, 390
Ruskin, John, 363-4, 368-9, 423-4
Russell, John, 75, 81 Lord John, 80, 304
Rysbrach, 117, 226
S
St. Anne's Hill, 140, 149, 180, 184, 186-9, 206
St. Benedict, 48
St. Catherine's Chapel, 8, 9, 90, 92, 97 Hill, 7-9
St. Christopher, 68
St. Dunstan, 53
St. Francis, 21
St. George's Chapel, Windsor, 110 Hill, 140, 148-9, 198-9, 326
St. Hilaire, Barthelemy, 194
St. John the Baptist's well, 215
St. John's School, Leatherhead, 285
St. Leonards, Lord, 251
St. Martha's chapel, 5, 8-10, 88, 90-2, 95, 134, 186, 317
St. Mary's chapel, Kingston, 245 church, Guildford, 65-6, 77-8 Southwark, 361, 437
St. Nicholas, church of, Guildford, 8, 64, 77
St. Paul's cathedral, 187, 199, 317, 438
St. Saviour's, Southwark, 433, 437
St. Thomas's shrine, Reigate, 11, 13
Salisbury Plain, 1, 3, 7, 9
Salmon, historian, 33
Salmon in the Wey, 21
Salvin, Captain, 93
Samborne, James, 377
Sandby, Thomas, 200-1
Sanderstead, 357, 378
Sandown, 278
Saunder, family of, 388
Saxby, William, 404
Sayes Court, 319
Scott, Sir Gilbert, 12, 131, 350, 361, 391 Sir Walter, 237-8, 275, 304
Seale, 7, 57-8, 62
Sedley, Catherine, 197 Sir Charles, 261
Sedgmoor, 2, 19, 20, 72, 76
Sedgwick, S.N., 284
Selous, Frederic, 93
Selwyn, John, 256-7
Semaphores, 86
Send, 218, 220-1, 231, 258, 287
Severn, Joseph, 352
Shackleford, 137
Shakespeare, 45, 184, 408, 425
Shalford, 6, 9, 95-7, 100-1, 165, 382
Sharp, Richard ("Conversation" Sharp), 303-4, 328
Sheen, 219, 237, 240
Sheldon, Archbishop, 359, 361
Shelley, the poet, 202
Shenstone, the poet, 434
_Shepherds Hunting, the_, 18
Sherborne (Shirebourne) farm and ponds, 107-9
Shere, 10, 100-1, 109-15, 131, 206, 419
Shergold, 353-4
Sheridan, Richard Brinsley, 99, 196, 304, 317, 427
Shiers, family of, 288-9
Shooting at a cormorant, 248
Shottermill, 145-6, 149
Shrewsbury, Lord, 354 and Countess (temp. Charles II.), 432
Shuter, John, 253
Sidney Wood, 164, 166-7
Silent Pool, the, 107-9
Six Bells inn, Horley, 381
Skelton, John, 283-4
Skern, Robert, 247
Slipshoe lane, 11, 348
Slyfield family, 123, 287-90 Place, 123-4, 287-90, 320
Smallfield Place, 383, 392
Smith, A.L., 431 Albert, of Chertsey, 185 Henry ("Dog" Smith), 98
Smugglers, 166-7, 337-8
Somers, Lord, 351
Somerset, Lady Henry, 351
South Sea Bubble, 263, 370
Southcote family, 377
Southey, Robert, 304
Southwark, 26, 405, 425, 434, 437, 439
_Spectator, the_, 87, 90, 122
Speed, John, 132, 424 Samuel, 132
Stafford family, 394-5
Stane Street, or Stone Street, 11, 174, 296, 313, 326, 335-6, 341, 344
Stanley, Lord, 272
Star inn, Lingfield, 404
Steere, a yeoman family, 338
Steinman, G.S., 362, 364
"Stella," Esther Johnson, 45-6
_Stephan Langton_, 107
Stephenson, H.H., 253
Sterborough, 404, 406
Stevens, "Lumpy," 42, 221, 223, 258
Stevenson, R.L., 210
Stillwell, James, 148
Stocks, village, in Surrey, 96, 165, 322
Stockwell, 436
Stoke D'Abernon, 125, 287-96
Stonehenge, 1
Strachey, John St. Loe, 87
Streatfeild, "Mr. Antiquary," 420
Streatham, 426-7
Stuart, Charles Edward, 434
Sueter, Tom, 42
Sumner, Archbishop, 19, 378
Surbiton, 235, 249-51, 255
Surrey rifle clubs, 88
Surrey Side, the, 432-40
Sussex, Duke of, 314
Sutton, 371-2 Place 93, 136
Swallows of the Mole, the, 298
Swan inn, Haslemere, 140 Leatherhead, 284 Reigate, 348, 353 Thames Ditton, 250, 253
Swanton, E.D., 141, 144
Swasso, Baron, 263
Swete, C.J., 271, 303
Swift, Jonathan, 43, 45, 48, 393
Sydney family, the, 124
T
Tabard inn, 13, 439
_Table Talk_, 187, 196
Talbot inn, Ripley, 223 (The Tabard), 439
_Tale of a Tub, the_, 23, 43, 45
Talleyrand, 300, 302, 305
Tandridge, 389-91, 414-17 Hill Lane, 12, 13
Tangley Manor, 100, 413
Tanhurst, 338
Tankerville, Lord, 42
Tasmania, Bishop of, 435
Tate, Archbishop, 378
Tatsfield, 98, 139, 414, 422
Tattenham Corner, 266
_Taverns in Ten Shires near London, Catalogue of_, 80, 353
Taylor, John, 80, 353-4
Temple, Sir William, 43, 45, 317 Lady, 45
Tennyson, Lord, 141, 145
Thackeray, W.M., 138
Thames, the, 103, 179, 180-1, 183, 202, 204, 237, 247, 258, 273, 336, 405, 431, 437-9
Thames Ditton, 250, 254
Thanet, 1, 87
Thimble, Thomas, 119
Thomas, Bishop, 16
Thomson, James, 237
Thorold, Anthony, Bishop, 21
Thorpe, 109, 206
Thorncroft, 285, 298
Thorwaldsen, 329
Thrales, the, 426-7
Three Compasses inn, Kingston, 244
_Thrush in February, the_, 305
Thunderfield Castle, 382
Thunder Hill, 153
Thursley, 14, 145, 147, 150-1, 153-61, 165, 168, 206, 229, 341
Tilford, 30-42, 136
Tillingbourne, the river, 10, 91, 100-1, 104-5, 107, 320
Timbs, John, 301, 317, 329
Titsey, 4, 13, 356, 390, 414, 416, 422
Tofts, Mary, 133-4
Toland, John, 262-3
Tollsworth Farm, 11, 376
Tongham, 55-6
Tonson, Jacob, 432
Tooke and Horne Tooke, 379
Tooley Street, 437
Tooth, Thomas, 303
Toplady, Augustus, 25
Tower Hill, 120, 395 of London, 184
Townsend, Meredith, 122
Tradescants, the, 436-7
Trecothick, Mrs. Grizzel, 378
Trout Farms, 145
Tumble Beacon, 273
_Tunnyng of Eleanor Rumming, the_, 283-4
Tupper, Martin, 69, 71, 90, 107, 114, 346-7
Turner, Lady Diana, 285
Turner, Thackeray, 81
Turpin, Dick, 211
Tyers, Tom, and Jonathan, 316
Tyndall, John, 141, 146
Tytings, 10
U
Unicorn inn, Farnham, 48
Unstead Farm, 97-8
V
Vachery Manor and Pond, 173-4, 325
Vanbrugh, Sir John, 275
Vancouver's Island, 237
'Vanity Fair,' 6, 96
Vassall, Samuel, 71, 130
Vauxhall, 82, 316, 433, 436
Vernons, at Farnham, 27-8
_Victoria History of Surrey, the_, 105
Victoria, Queen, 16, 275, 278, 430
Villiers, Barbara, 260-1, 272 Lord Francis, 249 Thomas Hyde, 393
Vincent, Sir Thomas and Lady, 290
Virginia Water, 200-1
W
Waggoner's Wells, 149
Waldegrave family, 377
Waller, J.G., 78-9, 375, 405 Sir William, 18-9
Wallin, Miss, 263
Wallington, 368
Wall Paintings, 78-80, 229-30, 374-5, 386-8
Walpole, Horace, 196, 272, 301
Walton Heath, 273 Izaak, 21, 361 on Thames, 42, 255-8 on the Hill, 270, 273-4 on the Naze, 273
Wanborough, 61-3, 98
_Wanderer, the_, 301
Wandle, river, 365, 368
Wandsworth, 362-3
Ward, the family, 437
Warlingham, 378-9, 390
Warwick, Earl of, 405
Waterer's rhododendrons, 210
Waterloo, 83, 124, 126, 197, 278 Bridge, 438
Watney, John, 332 family, Horely, 382
Watson, Marriott, 109 William, 88, 177
Watts, George Frederick, 60
Waverley Abbey, 7, 30, 38, 43-55, 83, 136 William, Abbot of, 52-3 Way, the, 1, 13, 66, 87-8, 97, 376
Webb, Charles, 341 Philip Carteret, 142
_Weekly Political Register_, 22
Wellington, Duke of, 124, 435
Westcott, 317, 320, 328
West End, 216
West Humble, 299, 301
Westminster Abbey, 45, 183, 317 School, 23
Weston, family, the, 93, 99
Wey, the river, 9, 21-3, 34, 38, 43, 45, 48, 55, 64-6, 70, 77, 90, 92, 101, 126, 130, 135-6, 157, 167, 179, 191, 193, 198-9, 207, 217-35, 292, 344
Wey Salmon, 21
Weybridge, 130, 179, 188, 190-9, 219, 228, 257, 259, 330
Weyhill Fair, 9, 14, 26
Wharton, Sir Polycarpus, 105
Whinney Moor, 375
Whitaker, Admiral, Sir Edward, 370
White, Burstow huntsman, 383, 385 family of, 124 Gilbert, 148, 228
White Hall, Cheam, 272 Hart inn, Bletchingley, 392 Godalming, 126 Guildford, 80 Reigate, 353-5 Wittey, 160, 162 Hill, 11 Horse inn, Dorking, 309, 312 Hascombe, 170 Haslemere, 140 Shere, 10, 109 Lion inn, Cobham, 29 "_Shock_," 42
Whitewaysend, 55, 59
Whitgift, Archbishop, 358-9, 361
Whitgift's Hospital, 74, 359-60, 364 School, 360
Whitmoor House, 93
Whymper, C., painter, 141 Josiah Wood, 141
Wigan, family, Mortlake, 382
Willey Green, House and Mill, 65
William I., 219 III., 105, 258, 277, 351, 370
William of Waynflete, 276-7
Williamson, Dr. G.C., 68, 70
Wilsham Farm, 65
Wiltshire, of the Feathers inn, Kingston, 247
Wimbledon, 215, 427-30
Winchester, 2, 4, 6, 7, 14, 23, 53, 66, 83, 97, 151, 336, 344-5
Windle Brook, 216
Windlesham, 209-10
Windsor, Andrew, 15
Windsor, 28, 110, 122, 204 Castle, 186-7, 199 Forest, 16, 208 Park, 104, 200, 202, 257
Winstanley, the "Leveller," 198
Winterton, Lord, 168
Wisley, 218, 222, 228, 231, 233 Garden, 231
Wither, George, 17-9
Witley, 139, 141, 145, 153, 159-62 Heights, 161
Wogheners, 98
Woking, 95, 217-21, 227, 229, 231, 235, 321, 356 Forest, 219
Woldingham, 139, 378-9, 390
Wolfs Hill, 326
Wolley, Sir John, 231
Wolsey, Cardinal, 219, 276-7
Wonersh, Wonish, 70-1, 95, 98-9, 130
Woodhouse, local poet, 286
Woodmansterne, 270, 273
Wool trade in Surrey, 70-1, 130
Worcester, Earl of, 104
Wordsworth, William, 252, 305
Worplesdon, 63, 93, 95
_Worthies'_, Fullers', 298, 377
Wotton, 100, 103-5, 112, 316-21, 323 Hatch, 317, 321
Wrecclesham, 30, 40, 42
Wriothesley, Henry, second Earl of Southampton, 138
Wyatt, Richard, 134 Sir Thomas, 121
Wycliff, John, 208
Y
Yalden, William, ironmaster, 157 of Chertsey, cricketer, 42
Yews, at Alfold, 165 Crowhurst, 171, 408 Dunsfold, 165 Hambledon, 165, 171 Hascombe, 170 Newlands' Corner, 177 Norbury Park, the Druids' Walk, 301-2 along the Way, 11
York, Duchess of, 196-7 Dukes of, 190, 196-7, 430 Town, 209
Z
Zouch, Sir Edward, 219 Lord, 73
THE END
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